
On May 4, 1989, the Magellan spacecraft was deployed from the shuttle.
The spacecraft is topped by a 3.7m (12ft) -diameter
dish-shaped antenna that was a spare part left over from the Voyager
program. The long, white, horn-shaped antenna, attached just to the left
of the dish antenna, is the altimeter antenna that gathers data concerning
the surface height of features on Venus.
Most of the spacecraft is wrapped in reflective white thermal blankets
that protect its sensitive instruments from solar radiation.

The Magellan spacecraft's deployment from the shuttle Atlantis' cargo
bay was captured by an astronaut with a hand-held
camera pointed through the shuttle's aft flight deck windows. Deployment
occurred in the early evening of May 4, 1989, after
Atlantis had carried Magellan and its Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) booster
rocket, into low Earth orbit. Once the shuttle was
safely away from the spacecraft, the IUS ignited and placed Magellan
on course for its 15-month journey to Venus.

Magellan gets a final boost from the second stage of the Inertial Upper
Stage in this artist's depiction. This event occurred on
May 4, 1989, and signified the beginning of the operational phase of
the spacecraft. Magellan entered the orbit of Venus 15
months later on August 10, 1990.
On August 10, 1990, Magellan entered into orbit about Venus, as depicted
in this artist's view. During its 243-day primary
mission, referred to as Cycle 1, the spacecraft mapped well over 80
percent of the planet with its high-resolution Synthetic
Aperture Radar (SAR). By the end of the mission, 99% of the planet
had been mapped. The spacecraft returned more digital
imaging data in the first cycle than all previous U.S. planetary missions
combined.

The sequence of events that comprise a Magellan mapping orbit are shown
in this artist's conception. For the first 37.2 minutes
of each orbit, the Synthetic Aperture Radar measures and records a
20 km (12 mi) -wide swath of the planet's surface. When
Magellan reaches the high point of its orbit, the spacecraft turns
its antenna toward Earth and transmits the data. After 113.8
minutes of transmitting, the antenna is repositioned for another orbit
about Venus. The spacecraft used this orbit to complete
three mapping cycles of radar-imaging data and two cycles of gravity
and radio science data. In May, 1993, the spacecraft
entered its final, aerobraking phase, in which its orbit was gradually
lowered and made more circular, allowing Magellan to
collect more gravity data and to conduct radar and radio science experiments.
The Magellan mission ended when the spacecraft was allowed to plunge into
Venus' atmosphere in October, 1994.